The Stone Roses |
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Released: May 2, 1989 Peak: 86 US, 5 UK, 62 CN, 36 AU Sales (in millions): -- US, 1.2 UK Genre: alternative rock/Britpop |
Tracks:Song Title (Writers) [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to charts.
Total Running Time: 49:02 The Players:
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Rating:4.411 out of 5.00 (average of 33 ratings)
Quotable:“There’s almost no precedent for the Stone Roses…their debut was a fully formed gem that gave birth to an entire genre – Brit-pop.” – Josh Tyrangiel and Alan Light, Time magazineAwards:(Click on award to learn more). |
The Band’s BeginningsThe Stone Roses formed in 1984 in Manchester, England. They originally consisted of singer Ian Brown, guitarist John Squire, and drummer Alan “Reni” Wren. They “didn’t really get going unti bassist Gary ‘Mani’ Mounfield joined three years later.” TB Their first singles, 1988’s “Elephant Stone” and 1989’s “Made of Stone,” didn’t chart, “but generated high expectations among British tastemakers and trendsetters.” TBThe Stone Roses’ InfluenceAt the time, “British youth were abandoning rock music en masse for acid-house sounds and communal raves” BN “and the charts were looking less than healthy.” AD “The notion of mingling elements of rock with rave culture was outlandish,” TM but the Stone Roses managed to bring “dance music to an audience…previously obsessed with droning guitars.” AM They “almost single-handedly made British rock music hip again.” BNOther bands “began pursuing the idea in earnest,” TM which “ushered in the era of Madchester,” AZ “an indie rock phenomenon that fused guitar-pop with drug-fueled rave and dance culture.” AM None of the Stone Roses’ imitators, however, “quite equaled the crazed confluence of wiggly grooves, pinging guitars, and blissed-out vocals that distinguish this album.” TM What made the album distinct from its electronica predecessors was that while “deeply influenced by acid house and other styles, it didn’t simply sample existing material. Instead, it sought to re-create the hypnotic beat in a rock context.” TM “Pop hooks [are] one thing, and dance rhythms [are] another, but it’s also important to have dat swing, you know, and the band has it.” GS The Birth of BritpopThrough “classic psychedelia married with punk energy and rave swagger” BN, the Roses established themselves as “postmodern English, filtering folk-rock romanticism through Joy Division and Jesus and Mary Chain hyperromanticism.” RC The Stone Roses wasn’t just significant in introducing the dance-meets-rock Madchester scene, but “gave birth to an entire genre – Brit-pop.” TL “The Charlatans and Happy Mondays through to Blur, Oasis, and the Verve have scored U.K. hits owing a debut to the Stone Roses’ sound.” TBThe band “cast a long shadow over much of the guitar-based music of the 1990s” TB influencing “shoegazer bands like My Bloody Valentine” RV and even serving as “a definite precursor of grunge.” JA The Album’s Influence Beyond Britpop and GrungeThe album “creates its own world and atmosphere whilst simultaneously reminding you of almost every great sixties English group.” AD It has “the lyrical sensibilities of John Lennon and Joe Strummer, mixes in Motown rhythms, adds a dash of Sex Pistols and tops it off with a purple haze of instrumentation and production reminiscent of Jimi Hendrix.” RV “The vocal melodies are well-written and sound fresh, sincere, and inspiring. And happy, too: this is one hell of a cheerful, optimistic record.” GS “Only The Beatles ever dared exhaust so many good tunes in the space of an hour.” IB Ultimately, the album is “a crystallization of everything there is to love about the last 40 years of pop music.” RV “Only the Smiths’ The Queen Is Dead comes close in terms of importance and influence among British guitar-based music.” TBThe BandFrontman Ian Brown revived “the concept of classic pop songwriting.” AM “Quietly melodic” PK “prime ‘sixties’ harmonies” AD “owe far more to, say, Simon & Garfunkel than to New Order.” PK The lyrics “flicked at epic romance…without veering into sentimentality.” TLGuitarist John Squire establishes himself as “a new hero for a new age,” AZ deftly heading into the world of “guitar heroism without the attendant pomp and egomania.” IB His “playing is endlessly inventive but never overwhelms the songs.” IB His “layers of simple, exceedingly catchy hooks” AM are “a thing of magic,” AZ “recalling the British Invasion while suggesting the future with their phased, echoey effects.” AM He “lingered over chords like the Byrds’ Roger McGuinn.” TL Drummer Alan ‘Reni’ Wren “translated the relentless pulse of house into vital, breathing, human grooves.” TM His “galloping, hiphop-influenced beats [are] a sonic infusion that became a fixture of ‘90s alt rock.” JA Along with bassist ‘Mani’ Mounfield, the two “shift from charging beat-pop to fluid funkadelic grooves, sometimes in the space of a single song.” IB They “always imply dance rhythms without overtly going into the disco,” AM establishing themselves as “one of the tightest British rhythm sections of the time.” GS “This is as good as guitars, bass and drums can sound together, and if you don’t get it, you probably have some disease that keeps you from liking music.” IB The SongsHere are insights into the individual songs.“I Wanna Be Adored” “Emerging through a thick, but parting musical fog of winding, digitally echoed guitars, a disembodied bass line and the lone pull of a steam train, Brown audaciously announces, ‘I don’t need to sell my soul / He’s already in me.’” AG-21 The song is “a meditation on achieving immortality through success” AG-21 and “a shameless but catchy blast of sheer self-promotion.” AG-21 However, one could also say it “doesn’t seem like an egotistical statement from a band in its infancy as much as it is a prelude to greatness.” RV Besides, the song is “far more vulnerable…than it appears. On the surface, the repetition of the song’s title in the framework reveals a desperate yearning for success and adoration, but deeper than that, it’s a shameless almost adolescent search for approval.” AG-24 In the end, the song is “The Stone Roses’ piece de resistance, the song that provides a titular thesis and gives the subsequent numbers their steam, both sonically and thematicall.” AG-26
“She Bangs the Drums” It’s also “a great example of the Stone Roses’ almost preternatural talent for knowing how to deliver a winning blow in a pop song.” AG-33 It “is the kind of song that bands spend their careers trying to write; it’s verses are rousing, its chorus exhileratin and in between all that, the notion of ‘the future’s mine,’ is an inspiring proclamation by a band staking their claim on a new era and cheering the death of the old one.” AG-33 Contextually, the song fits into the late ‘80s atmosphere of England when the lower class were feeling trampled by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s policies and turning to ecstasy-fueled rave parties for escapism. Thus the song “comes off as a rallying cr for governmental change.” AG-30 The Stone Roses weren’t “considered a political band, but Brown was quick to remind the press in the late eighties that they had no qualms engaging in civil discourse.” AG-30
“Waterfall” “Sonically, it’s a gentle, swirling number that demonstrates the band’s finesse and range.” AG-55 Lyrically, however, it is “like many of the Stone Roses’ songs…purposely impenentrable and open to interpretation” AG-53 but “it appears to be about a young woman who finds her physical, emotional, and possibly spiritual freedom through the use of drugs.” AG-53 It’s a song “about growing up by taking a trip – or tripping and then growing up.” AG-56
“Don’t Stop” “Bye Bye Badman” “Beginning with Squire’s muted guitar and ending with a flanged solo, all propelled by Brown’s thoughtful hush, ‘Bye Bye Badman’ manages…to achieve a lilting pop momentum.” AG-71 “Elizabeth My Dear” While this song lacks the venom of the Sex Pistols’ classic “God Save the Queen,” “Elizabeth My Dear” “is haunted by a subdued sense of menace.” AG-75 It is “beautifully played and lyrically direct…Its irresistibility lies somewhere between Brown’s saccharine vocals, Squire’s gentle picking, and the sheer force of its political subversion.” AG-78 “(Song for My) Sugar Spun Sister” It’s accompanied by “minor changes in which Squire’s guitar fades up and down like the sound of someone changing his mind.” AG-85 “Made of Stone” It “depicts the destruction of Manchester under dwindling industrialization and Margaret Thatcher’s iron fist. ‘When the streets are cold and lonely / And the cars they burn below me / Are you all alone / Are you made of stone?’” RV British magazine New Musical Express called it “the final, painful, unanswered question.” AG-96
“Shoot You Down” “Yet it’s all delivered so smoothly, making the elegant menace that surfaces through its placid currents all the more disturbing.” AG-101 “Set against its airy instrumentation, Brown shadowboxes behind Squire’s sleepy riffs, just ahead of Mani’s drowsy bass and in between the shuffle of Reni’s nimble drumming.” AG-100 It makes for a “gliding, predatory classic.” AG-105 “This Is the One” It is “an inspiring pop song boasting stirring background vocals and a textured melodic attack.” AG-109 “On the strength of Brown’s starry murmur, Squire’s clamoring power chords, Reni’s rushing cymbals and Mani’s metronomic but breezy bass line, the song surges into an accelerated sige of lush, layered harmonies that rise and sail over each other in continuously flowing bursts of pure mellisonance.” AG-110 Melody Maker called it “the centerpiece of the record.” AG-110 “I Am the Resurrection”
ConclusionThe band would never find a way to equal their debut. With their fame came subsequent legal battles to move from independent status to a major label. They eventually signed with Geffen and, five years after their debut, “reemerged…with the stodgy and wrongly titled Second Coming. The Stone Roses, however, remains a stellar contribution to the canon of classic debuts.” BN It is “one of the finest records of the past 30 years.” CL “Some albums really can change the world, and in 1989 this was one of them.” AZNotes:There are versions of the album which include the singles “Elephant Stone” and “Fools Gold.” |
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First posted 3/23/2008; last updated 9/12/2024. |
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